Physical and Surface Properties of Comet Nuclei from Remote Observations [EPA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2304.09309


We summarize the collective knowledge of physical and surface properties of comet nuclei, focusing on those that are obtained from remote observations. We now have measurements or constraints on effective radius for over 200 comets, rotation periods for over 60, axial ratios and color indices for over 50, geometric albedos for over 25, and nucleus phase coefficients for over 20. The sample has approximately tripled since the publication of Comets II, with IR surveys using Spitzer and NEOWISE responsible for the bulk of the increase in effective radii measurements. Advances in coma morphology studies and long-term studies of a few prominent comets have resulted in meaningful constraints on rotation period changes in nearly a dozen comets, allowing this to be added to the range of nucleus properties studied. The first delay-Doppler radar and visible light polarimetric measurements of comet nuclei have been made since Comets II and are considered alongside the traditional methods of studying nuclei remotely. We use the results from recent in situ missions, notably Rosetta, to put the collective properties obtained by remote observations into context, emphasizing the insights gained into surface properties and the prevalence of highly elongated and/or bilobate shapes. We also explore how nucleus properties evolve, focusing on fragmentation and the likely related phenomena of outbursts and disintegration. Knowledge of these behaviors has been shaped in recent years by diverse sources: high resolution images of nucleus fragmentation and disruption events, the detection of thousands of small comets near the Sun, regular photometric monitoring of large numbers of comets throughout the solar system, and detailed imaging of the surfaces of mission targets. Finally, we explore what advances in the knowledge of the bulk nucleus properties may be enabled in coming years.

Read this paper on arXiv…

M. Knight, R. Kokotanekova and N. Samarasinha
Thu, 20 Apr 23
33/57

Comments: 43 pages, 6 figures. Chapter in press for the book Comets III, edited by K. Meech and M. Combi, University of Arizona Press